1. Henry Clay Frick, a rich New Yorker, died in 1919, leaving his house, furniture and art collection to the American people.
2. Later there were sales to Henry Clay Frick and to Andrew Mellon and his son Paul.
3. By 1890, Carnegie and his chief lieutenant, Henry Clay Frick, had decided that the Amalgamated "had to go, " even at Homestead.
4. Although Carnegie said he favored unions, he backed the goal of his deputy, Henry Clay Frick, of regaining unchallenged control over the plant.
5. Compared with some of the bigger museums, the Frick, housed in a mansion on Fifth Avenue built by Henry Clay Frick, is a remarkably calm setting.